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On Tue, 28 Apr 2009 14:00:36 +0000, Rick wrote:
Hi Herb, That number is "house number." Those numbers hide the commercial equivalent of that transistor. I doubt you will find any Motorola documentation giving you an equivalent. There may be some cross reference guide somewhere that some gracious soul assembled but I bet it will be without Motorolas blessing ! There is a very high probability that you can substitute any of hundreds of similar transistors and they will work, depending on the function of that transistor. If it was used for RF amplifier service you could try a 2N3866 or 2N5109, for example. I used to work for Western Electric and the Bell System did something similar. We had "KS" parts. In most cases they were identical to commercial parts but we did quality sampling, life cycle testing, etc. on them and assured ourselves that we weren't getting scrap swept up off the floor. For this we marked up the price about ten fold (!!!) as we supplied these "approved" parts to our factories. The factories built things then that they expected to last 50 years. Motorola probably did the same. This also helped to keep repair technicians from substituting "commercial junk" into Motorola equipment and destroying their pristine reputation. But I digress...... Rick K2XT Hmm, I don't know if it is a house number. My 1987 D.A.T.A. Transistor book goes up to only SS3638. Al |
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